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Internet Exchange Points

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These were only UK ISPs with their own international connectivity ! ... E-mail: keith_at_xchangepoint.net. Phone: 44 20 7395 6020. Web: http://www.keithmitchell.co.uk ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Internet Exchange Points


1
Internet Exchange Points Case Study Europe Keith
Mitchell CTO, XchangePoint ICANN GAC Regional
Forum Cape Town 30th Nov 2004
2
Outline of Presentation
  • Introduction
  • Internet Interconnect Principles
  • History of IXPs in UK
  • Internet Exchange Governance Models
  • Internet Exchange Technologies
  • Setting up an Internet Exchange

3
Speakers Background
  • Founder of UKs first commercial ISP,PIPEX,
    1992-1996
  • Founder and Executive Chairman ofLondon Internet
    Exchange, LINX, 1994-2000
  • First chair of RIPE EIX Working Group
  • Founder and CTO of first pan-European commercial
    IXP operator, XchangePoint, 2000-
  • XchangePoint currently operates IXPs inLondon,
    Frankfurt, Amsterdam and Hamburg

4
Internet Interconnect Principles
5
What happens at anInternet Exchange Point ?
  • Multiple ISPs locate backbone IP router nodes in
    single building operated by co-location provider
  • In-building connections
  • to shared interconnect fabric(using Ethernet LAN
    switching technology)
  • over point-to-point private interconnections
  • Routing information, and hence traffic, is
    exchanged bi-laterally between ISPs
  • Exchange operator may or may not be same
    organisation as co-location provider
  • Co-location provider will generally have other
    customers
  • carriers, hosting, content distributors, NS
    registries/registrars

6
IXP Advantages
  • Single large pipe to the IXP more efficient than
    many smaller pipes to many ISPs

IXP Internet eXchange Point
ISP Internet Service Provider
7
IXP Advantages
  • Keeps domestic traffic within a country/region
    without having to take indirect international
    route
  • Typically 20-35 of traffic can be domestic
  • Reduced bandwidth costs
  • Improved throughput and latency performance
  • Economies of scale
  • Commercial basis of traffic exchange between ISPs
    across IXP usually via cost-saving peering
  • Critical mass of ISPs in a single location
    creates competitive market in provision of
    capacity, transit and services

8
Inter-ISP Interconnect
  • Peering
  • two ISPs agree to provide access to each others
    customers
  • commonly no money changes handssettlement
    free
  • barter of perceived equal value
  • simple commercial agreements
  • Public Interconnect
  • Internet Peering Point (IPP or IXP or NAP)
  • multiple parties connect to shared switched
    fabric
  • commonly Ethernet based
  • open, many-to-many connectivity
  • traffic exchange between consenting pairs of
    participants
  • Other models exist

9
UK InternetExchanges History
10
10 Years of UK Internet Exchanges
  • LINX first switched UK to UK Internet traffic on
    8th November 1994
  • Presentation yesterday evening at the Science
    Museum, London
  • Two original LINX switches have become permanent
    exhibits !

11
Formation of LINX - 1994
  • London INternet eXchange (LINX) was set up
    through voluntary co-operation between 5 founder
    ISPs
  • PIPEX, Demon, JANET, BT, Eunet GB
  • These were only UK ISPs with their own
    international connectivity !
  • Located in neutral data centre/co-location
    facility, Telehouse
  • Initially simple 10Mb/s Ethernet hub
  • Infrastructure and connectivity established
    first
  • finance, governance, legalities came later

12
Evolution of LINX 1994-2000
  • Incorporated as not-for-profit membership
    organisation 1995
  • Hired first full-time employee 1996
  • Over 50 members in 1997
  • Multiple data centres in London metro area 1998
  • Over 1Gb/s traffic 1999
  • Over 100 members 2000
  • XchangePoint established as commercial company by
    LINX founders late 2000
  • Over 60Gb/s of IXP traffic in London 2004

13
IXPs in London Today
  • Multiple competing Internet Exchanges with
    different models
  • LINX
  • XchangePoint
  • LoNAP
  • LIPEX
  • UK6X
  • Other similar companies, e.g. Band-X,
    PacketExchange
  • Diversity and competition good, up to a point !
  • Serve different (though overlapping) physical
    facilities and stakeholder communities
  • Market mature and arguably ripe for consolidation

14
IXP Governance andCommercial Models
15
Importance of IXP Neutrality
  • In most markets, IXPs are a natural monopoly
  • problem of trust between competitors
  • risks of abuse and conflicts of interest
  • Successful IXPs are not usually
  • owned, operated or housed by a single ISP or
    carrier
  • ISPs or wholesale IP transit providers
  • national or international backbones
  • Co-location facility neutrality
  • normally (mainly in Europe) these are buildings
    operated by independent commercial companies
  • though sometimes (mainly in US) co-los operate
    IXPs
  • IXPs tend not to be in carrier co-lo facilities

16
Successful IXPNeutrality Principles
  • Does not compete with its ISP members/customers
  • Does not discriminate between its ISP
    members/customers
  • Does not move traffic between cities or countries
  • Does not make exclusive arrangements with
  • ISPs
  • Carriers
  • Co-lo Providers
  • Does not provide IP transit routing
  • Does not take share of ISPs transit revenues
  • Only interconnects between metro area co-lo sites
  • May be present at multiple co-lo sites and
    providers

17
Governance/Commercial Models
  • Operated by public sector national academic
    network
  • BNIX, GIGAPIX
  • Not-for-profit membership associations of
    participating ISPs
  • LINX, AMS-IX
  • Over 90 of the 400 IXPs globally work this way
    !
  • Service within commercial co-location operator
  • Equinix, PAIX, IX Europe
  • Companies whose shareholders are participating
    ISPs
  • MIX, JPIX
  • Independent neutral commercial companies
  • XchangePoint, JPNAP

18
Internet Exchanges in Europe
  • IXP operators are typically
  • neutral
  • not-for-profit membership organisations
  • do not run hosting/co-location facilties
  • not same organisation as co-location provider
  • Major cities, e.g. London, Amsterdam, Frankfurt,
    Paris
  • switch pan-European traffic
  • have multiple exchange operators
  • have multiple co-location facilties
  • each have several to 10s of Gb/s of traffic
  • Usually one smaller national exchange per country
    for domestic traffic

19
IXP Technologies
20
IXP Technologies History
  • Initially (1992-4)
  • 10Mb/s Ethernet from ISP router to IXP switch
  • FDDI between IXP switches
  • Single switch in single location
  • 100Mb/s Ethernet mostly replaced these 5 years
    ago
  • Some use of ATM meantime
  • 1Gb/s Ethernet now common access technology
  • 1Gb/s Ethernet also used in core of networks
  • 10Gb/s Ethernet increasingly common in IXP cores
  • Some limited use of DWDM and MPLS

21
Gigabit Ethernet
  • Cost-effective and simple high bandwidth
  • Most common technology for many ISPs accessing
    major IPPs
  • Works well for local and metropolitan distances
  • Proven and deployed at most major IPPs
  • Almost universally used for IPP inter-switch
    links
  • Technology is mature and price dropping
  • e.g. 1Gb/s over copper
  • Cost-effective high-performance switches
    available from various vendors
  • Cisco, Extreme, Foundry

22
Setting up an Internet Exchange
23
Getting Started
  • Key to IXP viability and growth is critical mass
  • Usually need at least 5 ISPs to get started
  • Getting competitors to co-operate is not always
    easy !
  • But demonstrable common benefits should win out
    in the end
  • For associations, simple MoU good starting point
  • Commercial operators will often use discounting
    strategies to attract initial group of ISPs
  • Generally best to concentrate on getting traffic
    moving as first priority, and concentrate on the
    paperwork/ politics/PR later

24
IXP Customer Requirements
  • Your own Autonomous System (AS) number
  • you need this if you take service from gt1 ISP
    anyway
  • Your own IP address space
  • need to become registrar of NRO member
    registrye.g. AFRINIC, RIPE NCC, ARIN
  • Router(s) which can do BGP
  • most medium/large Cisco/Juniper routers
  • also open-source based PC platforms
  • Space in one of the co-lo facilities at which it
    is present

25
IXPs and TLD Name-Servers
  • Many root, gTLD and ccTLD name servers are
    operated at major Internet Exchanges
  • Significant advantages
  • Low latency
  • Cheap high bandwidth
  • Rich connectivity
  • Many players can enjoy direct connection
  • Increases resilience and robustness
  • RIPE NCC hosted first instance of k root server
    at LINX
  • now also in Amsterdam, Frankfurt, Reykjavik
  • Nominets .uk primary and secondary ccTLD
    servers at both major London IXPs
  • Various instances of f, i , j k root servers at
    many Euro IXPs
  • .eu server deployment and procurement plans
    unclear

26
IXP Resources
  • RIPE EIX (European Internet eXchange)Working
    Group
  • http//www.ripe.net/ripe/wg/eix/
  • Euro-IX Association of IXP Operators
  • http//www.euro-ix.net
  • Global IXP Directory
  • http//www.ep.net
  • Packet Clearing House
  • http//www.pch.net
  • But the single most useful resource is self-help
    from the IXP and ISP community

27
Contact Details
  • Presentation
  • http//www.xchangepoint.net/info/ICANN-GAC-IXP.pdf
  • E-mail keith_at_xchangepoint.net
  • Phone 44 20 7395 6020
  • Web http//www.keithmitchell.co.uk
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